Copyright © The Author(s) 2011. Published by The Society for the Promotion of Roman StudiesWhen reading exempla and applying them to ethical decisions, Romans had to bear in mind the principle of situational variability: whether an action can be judged to be right depends on the circumstances in which it is performed; what is right for one person in a given situation may not be right for another. This principle and its ramifications are articulated by Valerius Maximus, Facta et Dicta Memorabilia. Comparison with Cicero, de Officiis suggests that situation ethics was a key feature of Roman ethics and that, within this framework, exempla may be understood as moral tools mediating between universal and particular
This thesis is a literary study of Valerius Maximus' Facta et Dicta Memorabilia, with particular foc...
This paper offers an historical analysis of the role of moral exemplarity in Thomas Aquinas‟ though...
MEDULLA MORALIS ARISTOTELICA: SIVE EXERCITATIONES ETHICAE XII. : AD LIBROS X. ARISTOTELIS AD NICOMAC...
Copyright © Cambridge Philological Society 2008. Published version reproduced with the permission of...
This dissertation expands our picture of Roman exemplarity by focusing on exempla as they are used t...
This dissertation expands our picture of Roman exemplarity by focusing on exempla as they are used t...
This dissertation expands our picture of Roman exemplarity by focusing on exempla as they are used t...
Cicero’s De officiis is one of the most important texts in Roman ethics, and one of the most cited l...
The theory of decorum in Cicero’s de officiis (44 BC) seems to suggest to the Romans not simply the ...
This thesis considers the ways in which Livy and Valerius Maximus integrate the Roman emotion verecu...
I examine all the occasions on which Aquinas uses a particular example, which goes back to Plato's R...
Traduzione inglese riveduta e aggiornata di contributo apparso come saggio provvisorio in volume pre...
This paper offers an historical analysis of the role of moral exemplarity in Thomas Aqu...
Scholarship stands divided on the question of what one must know in order to act ethically according...
This paper concerns an ethics of our medieval tradition (in particular good, happiness, natural law ...
This thesis is a literary study of Valerius Maximus' Facta et Dicta Memorabilia, with particular foc...
This paper offers an historical analysis of the role of moral exemplarity in Thomas Aquinas‟ though...
MEDULLA MORALIS ARISTOTELICA: SIVE EXERCITATIONES ETHICAE XII. : AD LIBROS X. ARISTOTELIS AD NICOMAC...
Copyright © Cambridge Philological Society 2008. Published version reproduced with the permission of...
This dissertation expands our picture of Roman exemplarity by focusing on exempla as they are used t...
This dissertation expands our picture of Roman exemplarity by focusing on exempla as they are used t...
This dissertation expands our picture of Roman exemplarity by focusing on exempla as they are used t...
Cicero’s De officiis is one of the most important texts in Roman ethics, and one of the most cited l...
The theory of decorum in Cicero’s de officiis (44 BC) seems to suggest to the Romans not simply the ...
This thesis considers the ways in which Livy and Valerius Maximus integrate the Roman emotion verecu...
I examine all the occasions on which Aquinas uses a particular example, which goes back to Plato's R...
Traduzione inglese riveduta e aggiornata di contributo apparso come saggio provvisorio in volume pre...
This paper offers an historical analysis of the role of moral exemplarity in Thomas Aqu...
Scholarship stands divided on the question of what one must know in order to act ethically according...
This paper concerns an ethics of our medieval tradition (in particular good, happiness, natural law ...
This thesis is a literary study of Valerius Maximus' Facta et Dicta Memorabilia, with particular foc...
This paper offers an historical analysis of the role of moral exemplarity in Thomas Aquinas‟ though...
MEDULLA MORALIS ARISTOTELICA: SIVE EXERCITATIONES ETHICAE XII. : AD LIBROS X. ARISTOTELIS AD NICOMAC...